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Home/ Questions/Q 6937019
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T12:18:37+00:00 2026-05-27T12:18:37+00:00

I’m currently writing a toy compiler as a homework, targeted at the MIPS architecture.

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I’m currently writing a toy compiler as a homework, targeted at the MIPS architecture.

There are 18 registers that are generally available when translating from higher-level languages: s0 to s7 which are callee-saved, and t0 to t9 which are caller-saved.

With these 18 registers available, a question emerges: which register should I prefer when performing the translation of a function.

Each set has its pros and cons:

  1. Callee-saved registers must be saved to and restored from the stack at the beginning and the end of a function, respectively.
  2. Caller-saved registers must be saved to and restored from the stack before and after invoking a subroutine, respectively.

It’s clear to me that if I adopt a static strategy on using these registers — whatever the strategy is, like preferring callee-saved registers over caller-saved ones — I will not get the optimal performance since most probably there will be unnecessary register load/stores.

So, is there any good practices of using these two sets of registers?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T12:18:37+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 12:18 pm

    Here’s a better solution than chill’s, which allocates registers in a finer granularity:

    First we perform liveness analysis for each variable, and:

    • For a variable the liveness interval of which spans a function call: we prefer callee-saved registers over caller-saved ones.
    • For a variable the liveness interval of which doesn’t span a function call: prefer caller-saved ones over callee-saved ones.
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